For most languages a single standard for documenting functions and methods in block comments (a.k.a. doc-blocks) has emerged.
For BASH, however, there does not seem to be a definitive convention. Several competing conventions exist, which made me think:
Could a list of doc-block tags be distilled from those used across all (or most) languages?
Time to find out!
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
# Reflects the requests from HTTP methods GET, POST, PUT, and DELETE | |
# Written by Nathan Hamiel (2010) | |
from http.server import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler | |
from optparse import OptionParser | |
class RequestHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler): | |
def do_GET(self): |
// UPDATE: In 2023, you should probably stop using this! The narrow version of Safari that | |
// does not support `nomodule` is probably not being used anywhere. The code below is left | |
// for posterity. | |
/** | |
* Safari 10.1 supports modules, but does not support the `nomodule` attribute - it will | |
* load <script nomodule> anyway. This snippet solve this problem, but only for script | |
* tags that load external code, e.g.: <script nomodule src="nomodule.js"></script> | |
* | |
* Again: this will **not** prevent inline script, e.g.: |
NOTE: This is outdated. Check the comments below for more up-to-date forks of this gist.
Improved YARD CHEATSHEET http://yardoc.org
forked from https://gist.github.com/chetan/1827484 which is from early 2012 and contains outdated information.
Map | Action |
---|---|
<F1> | Causes Netrw to issue help |
<cr> | Netrw will enter the directory or read the file |
<del> | Netrw will attempt to remove the file/directory |
- | Makes Netrw go up one directory |
a | Toggles between normal display, hiding (suppress display of files matching g:netrw_list_hide) showing (display only files which match g:netrw_list_hide) |
c | Make browsing directory the current directory |
C | Setting the editing window |
d | Make a directory |
alias homestead='function __homestead() { (cd ~/Documents/Code/Homestead && vagrant $*); unset -f __homestead; }; __homestead' | |
# Usage | |
homestead up | |
homestead halt | |
# etc... |
A simple Ghostscript command to merge two PDFs in a single file is shown below:
gs -dNOPAUSE -sDEVICE=pdfwrite -sOUTPUTFILE=combine.pdf -dBATCH 1.pdf 2.pdf
Install Ghostscript:
Type the command sudo apt-get install ghostscript
to download and install the ghostscript package and all of the packages it depends on.